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Cosmotheanthropic imagination in the post-Kantian process philosophy of Schelling and Whitehead

<p> In this dissertation, I lure the process philosophies of F. W. J. Schelling and A. N. Whitehead into orbit together around the transcendental philosophy of Immanuel Kant. I argue that Schelling and Whitehead&rsquo;s <i> descendental</i> aesthetic ontology provides a way across the epistemological chasm that Kant&rsquo;s critiques opened up between experience and reality. While Kant&rsquo;s problematic scission between the phenomenal world and the thing-in-itself remains an essential phase in the maturation of the human mind, it need not be the full realization of mind&rsquo;s potential in relation to Nature. I contrast Schelling&rsquo;s and Whitehead&rsquo;s descendental philosophies with Kant&rsquo;s transcendentalism by showing how their inverted methods bridge the chasm&mdash;not by resolving the structure of reality into clear and distinct concepts&mdash;but by replanting cognition in the aesthetic processes that power it. Hidden at the generative root of our seemingly separate human capacities for corporeal sensation and intellectual reflection is the same universally distributed creative power or imaginal ether underlying star formation and blooming flowers. Human consciousness is not a transcendental onlooker upon the world but a microcosmic participant in the Life of the Whole. Humanity is a development of what has always been enveloped in the Earth and wider universe, as natural as leaves on a tree. </p><p> Through a creative interweaving of their process-relational orientations, I show how the power of imagination so evident in Schelling&rsquo;s and Whitehead&rsquo;s thought can provide philosophy with genuine experiential insight into <i> cosmos, theos,</i> and <i>anthropos</i> in the aftermath of the Kantian revolution. The two&mdash;<i>anthropos</i> and <i> cosmos</i>&mdash;are perceived as one by a <i>common sense</i> described in this dissertation as <i>etheric imagination.</i> This etheric sense puts us in touch with the divine life of Nature, which the ancients personified as the <i>&psi;&upsi;&khgr;&eta; &tgr;o&upsi; &kappa;&oacute;&sigma;&mu;o&upsi; </i> or <i>anima mundi.</i></p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:10117893
Date13 July 2016
CreatorsSegall, Matthew David
PublisherCalifornia Institute of Integral Studies
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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